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How to Lose 100 Pounds

How to Lose 100 Pounds - Nosh Edition

Guess what you don't do a lot of when you are250 pounds? Exercise take full body shot pictures.In every picture I look back on I am either hidingbehind something/someone, or it is a head shot.

Facebook Status: People frequently ask me how I lost so much weight. And while the basic principles of "eat less, move more" reign supreme, my secret trick is that every so often I weigh myself and decide that it's okay to have a cupcake for breakfast. And today was a delicious morning.

So, I used to be 100 pounds heavier. When people learn that I usually get a lot of questions. The most frequent is ... HOW DID YOU LOSE IT? I don't claim to be an expert at weight loss. I've failed more than I've succeeded through the years. But this time it worked. And it keeps working. The quick stats:

This was my sister's wedding. I was really proud of myself because I'd lost40 pounds for her big day. 210 pounds.

I'd either just gotten married or was about to. Circa 2000-2001.

At Hosanna's birthday party in 2008. I was excited to fit in a juniors extra-large t-shirt.

AFTER: 33 years old, four kids, 5'3.5" (because sometimes when you work out your back gets stronger and your posture improves and you might get a little taller - whaaa?), 148 pounds

Also, fun fact = Because all the pictures of me are winners, here is an especially awesome one of me the day I did thepractice triathlon. It was taken earlier in the day when I was still sick in bed with the flu. Note the rockin' mom pony with elastic headband. You better work.

Vacation run with my sis - of course my arm is raised in a victory cheer - it's a vacation run.

Okay, two things. Yes, I am hiding behind a child again. But also, it's a super cute child and he is covered in cake. So yeah, perfect weight loss picture.

I'm going to attempt to do this entire post without using the words "transformation" or "journey". If I do this you each owe me four new followers dollars.

So, how did I lose 100 pounds? First I had to learn basic math. (Thank you, Elementary School.) The science behind weight loss is surprisingly simple when it's stripped down. I decided to look at weight loss as budgeting.

Louis Vuitton Lockit MM Handbag.Retail price: $3650.00

Let's pretend you wanted to buy this Louis Vuitton handbag. It retails for $3650.00. If you are anything like me you would need to do some serious saving in order to purchase this bag, because, in the Land of Budgeting, there are no credit cards. Or personal loans. You have two choices - save the money you are already earning, and/or go make more money and apply it to your Must Have Louis Vuitton fund.

So first, you figure out how much money it takes for you to live. House, car, food, etc. Then you figure out the difference between what you earn and what you need. If you can save $500 a month you can have this purse in (approximately) 7 months. If you want it before then, sister's gonna have to get an extra job so she can bank more cash. With me so far?

You do the same with weight loss. Say you want to lose 20 pounds. If you can save 500 calories a day you can lose 1 pound a week, reaching your goal in about 5 months. But if you want to reach your goal sooner than that you need to hit up the gym and burn more calories to add to your Must Get Skinny Healthy fund.

That's the idea in theory. I mean, you could always go and steal a Louis Vuitton handbag, wind up in prison, and eat baloney for the rest of your life. Or, I suppose you could buy a rip-off L.V., but that's a little like this:

From far away you might fool me, but up close ... c'mon now.

So if you want the real deal - the $3650 Louis Vuitton, the decrease in twenty pounds that showseven when you are naked - how do you budget in real life? What are the nuts and bolts of application?

A Girl's Gotta Eat

First, go to this calorie calculator and figure out your calorie budget. Be honest. (When I renewed my driver's license this June, I saw that the last time I had to report my weight I told a 75 pound lie.)(That's pretty ballsy.)(Or delusional.)(You pick.) I use the 7 day calorie cycle (zig-zag) for regular old fat loss for two reasons. 1. I can stick with that range forever. With the extreme fat loss I can do about a week before I cheat. 2. Zig-zagging my calories means that I don't plateau (just randomly stop losing weight) as much and I can look forward to a relatively "big" day once a week. My big day is Tuesday, and I really really love Tuesdays.

Next, buy a calorie counter/download an app/search the internet for the calorie counts of everything you eat, and write them down. This doesn't have to be all fancy and Pinterest-y; I've used leftover McDonald's napkins before. Oh, the delicious irony. In the beginning I measured or weighed everything. Now I can eyeball pretty accurately and save measuring for when my weight begins to creep up. (And it does; how I love you, International Delight Iced Coffee, at 150 calories a cup.)

Finally, stay within your budget. All the time.

It really is as simple as that. If you are faithful, you will lose weight. You don't need special food or crazy methods of eating. I eat out (big surprise if you are a regular reader, hmmm?) and have never bothered with the specialty diets (i.e. macro nutrients, clean food, low-carb, low-fat, etc.) The main reason I don't do them is I would never stick to them. I can't eat low-carb forever so I don't eat low-carb in order to lose weight. Once I've lost weight I want to keep it off. And I won't keep it off if I gooff my crazy low-carb (or whatever diet, no hate for low-carbers out there) and eat how I was eating before. Because how I was eating before made me weigh 250 pounds.

A quick warning: It is easy to get seduced by a "less is more" mentality. The one that says "If 1600 calories a day helped me lose one pound this week, imagine what 1000 calories a day could do!" Do you want to know what 1000 calories a day will do to you? Make you miserable. And about four days in, 1000 calories will make you binge. You will eat 3000 calories in one sitting, erasing any deficit you built up and providing a healthy dose of guilt with a side of failure. Take the extra calories up front; this is a plan for the rest of your life we are talking about here.I have always chosen foods I love in order to stay within my calorie budget. I'm not a big salad girl, I hate cottage cheese, and I really have to be in the mood for yogurt. But I did start to notice (afterobsessively responsibly tracking every bite) that certain foods made it easier for me to stay faithful. There were foods that kept me fuller longer, foods that took care of cravings for minimal calories, and foods that, conversely, royally messed me up. (I'm not pointing any fingers, but um, yeah, any kind of bulk chocolate in the house, I'm talking to you.)

Swoon.

Now I know my body better and can make appropriate, informed food choices. I've noticed that cereal doesn't really keep me filled up in the morning. When I eat it I'm usually jonesing for more food mid-morning. Breakfast is either toast with peanut butter and banana or cold oatmeal with whatever add-ins I'm in the mood for. I also start every day with a huge splurge - my beloved Iced Coffee.

Lunch has always been a challenge. I stay at home with the kiddos and we homeschool, so lunch just seems to sneak up and surprise me everyday. (Like, "What the heck, Lunch? Didn't we just do thisyesterday?) Leftovers are popular around here. Or sandwiches. I also probably eat one or two frozen diet meals a week for lunch, but I only eat ones I enjoy the taste of, because I will not shove crappytasting food in my mouth to lose weight.

As for dinners, I eat whatever I am making for the family. If we are having pizza, we are all having pizza. I just have to be mindful of my calorie intake. Little Caesar's Hot-N-Ready pizza has about 280 calories a slice. I can choose to eat two pieces and write down 560 calories for dinner. But that's all the food I'm getting, so I have to really want that pizza. (And who doesn't want pizza?)(This has to be the best weight loss post ever.)

So, what's left? Oh yeah, snacks. I'm not gonna lie. I eat snacks whenever I can "afford" them. This might be because I'm a perpetually hungry person, or because I just think eating is fun. (The advice just gets better and better, am I right?) Since I'm a "quantity" and not a "quality" person when it comes to food, I like things that I can eat a lot of. Popcorn, grape tomatoes, strawberries, greek yogurt because it takes forever to eat (because I have a process)(because I'm weird), nuts, chocolate covered raisins (see how I sneaked that in? Like a boss.) ... really, anything is fair game if I can afford it.

To summarize: How do you lose weight? Consistently eat less than you do now.

Tomorrow I will post on the other side of my weight loss, in which I had to learn what it was like tosweat like a dude.

If you have any questions, please comment or email me: Sublurbanmama@gmail.com

P.S. FULL DISCLOSURE: I wrote this entire post eating a Snicker's candy bar. It was 280 calories of deliciousness, and took approximately 29 minutes of running to burn off. It was worth every mile.

How to Lose 100 Pounds - Sweat Edition

So yesterday I posted about the nutritional side of my weight loss. I tried to include the key aspects of my weight loss, like "iced coffee is a food group." Today is dedicated to the physical side. Once your food intake is on point, the only other thing to do is move yer butt.

So why work out? Technically you can lose weight without it. If you consume less calories you will lose weight. But working out is the triumvirate* in the weight loss world.

2. It helps with the whole "loose skin" issue that Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition has so thoughtfully made known to the world. Because it's not like Spanx was totally helping a sister camouflage the ugly side of losing 100 pounds or anything. Now when people find out about a big loss, their first thought is about the "apron" of skin (how sick is that visual?) that must surely be hanging sexily (totally a word) from your otherwise rock hard abdominals. Truth? Lifting weights has helped tone my body so much that I have very little loose skin. Yes, I have a rockin' baby gut but I've also had four C-sections in seven years, so I feel I have earned that. It's like a trophy I will proudly display until I can afford a tummy tuck.

3. When your husband tackles you with the intention of blessing you with a wicked fart tent, you can totally defend yourself and tent him first. Exercise is a gift to your body: Swimmer's arms, shoulders, and backs. Runner's hamstrings, quads, and calves. Yoga/Pilates's *ahem* flexibility. Spinning's tush. Step Aerobic's unfailing demonstration of how little coordination you have

A Girl's Gotta Move

My extensive athletic history began after Ezra was born. It was September, 2010, and my sweet #4 child was seven weeks old. I thought that since I was already as sleep deprived and hormonal as I was ever going to be it was the perfect time to add calorie restriction and physical exhaustion to the list as well. (Again, I'm a planner, people.)

I started with a 5K running class based on the Couch to 5K program. I can't say enough about this method; it is awesome for non-athletes. It was hella hard, I'm not gonna lie, but 2 years after I completed the program I am still running. I ran my first 5K on Thanksgiving 2010, and finished in 37:47. My goal was 38:00, so ...nailed it. By my first 5K I lost 53 pounds.

Waiting for the start. 200 pounds and so freaking proud of myself. Also? Terrified to run this race.

My gym offered two free personal trainer sessions for buying our membership, and since my running class teacher was none other than Trainer Tom, I signed up with him. Our first session was awesomely horrifying, and I will write about it sometime, promise. The best thing about these sessions is that they got me into the gym. Up until then I was using my gym simply for the running track, on which I dutifully ran literal circles to reach my 5K goal.

Tom got me into the gym, showed me the equipment, how to adjust it, how to use it, and how to wipe it off when I was done. (Dude - it's not that hard.)(Seriously.) He gave me routines to do, and set up some goals to achieve and a plan to dominate them. (These were really do-able goals like "lose five pounds by next meeting(one month away)", "hold plank for 45 seconds", and "do 7girly push-ups". They weren't goals like "lose the 70 more pounds you need to lose" or anything that would drive me to quit.

When I started getting bored with my workouts, I signed up for another 5K. It was great motivation to keep moving. My next 5K was finished in 33:51. Whaaaa? Almost 4 minutes faster?! Jeah! (Say it like you're Ryan Lochte.)

Let's forget for a moment how incredibly photogenic I am, and focus on me weighing 174 here.

Once I got bored (again) I started taking the classes offered at my gym. It took me almost two weeks to convince myself to even enter the studio where Ab Lab was held. Now it's one of my favorite forms of torture classes. When I got bored (again) I signed up for another race.

My oldest ran the 5k with me and we PR'd! 32:47. 152 pounds. (I don't know what my hair ate for breakfast, but I swear I don't have a mullet.)

This year I decided the next boredom buster was triathlon. Obviously. I signed up for a triathlete swimming class and met Sarah, who took me under her triathlete wings and made me a supuh-stah.(Sound it out.) I worked for months towards triathlon, and it was fantastic.

Oh, you haven't seen this picture yet? (Haha, this is a joke because if you know me/read this blog/are friends with me on Facebook you have seen this picture 4,000 times.) 148 pounds.

Now what? I am challenging Jillian Michaels to a 30 Day Shred competition in September. I also have at least two races on the books for this fall. After that I'll just keep moving.

How Does This Help You?

And therein lies the best advice possible. Just start/keep moving. I started as out-of-shape as you could possibly be. I was postpartum, recovering from abdominal surgery, and more than 100 pounds overweight. I was worried about injury. I was worried about failure. I was worried about how fat I looked while I ran. I was worried I would fart/pee when I ran. (Totally did.) I had four children, a husband, and a household to take care of. I was tired. I was overwhelmed. I felt helpless.

But I have the heart of a Navy Seal and I wanted my life to change, so I started the only way I could: small.

It's so cliched but completely true that small changes make a big difference. I started with just being faithful to run three ugly times a week. I sloooowly added strength training. I slooooowly added cross training. The gradual changes are the ones you'll stick with.

All my fears about injury? Totally realized. At first I got shin splints. Then I had hip pain. Then knee pain. Then lower back pain. All these pains had a legit reason. I was using my body in ways it hadn't been used before. (Also I needed new running shoes.)(That's the story I sold my husband and I'm stickin' to it.)

Working out hurts (if you are doing it right). You should be sore afterwards; it means your body is getting stronger. I honestly don't remember the last time I wasn't a little bit sore. But the trade-off? I'm strong. I burn extra calories. I have endurance. I can play with my kids outside. I don't resent the baby when he drops his paci and I have to squat with an extra 20 pounds in my arms because Dude, I do squats in my spare time - I got this.All my fears about failure?I only failed when I quit. It took me three separate runs to be able to conquer the ten minute cycle of Couch to 5K. I learned through exercise what it means to persevere and that I am (physically and mentally) stronger than I think. (Raise your hand if you are a parent/child/employee/spouse and, at the end of your freaking rope, and have uttered the words, "I.am.done." Guess what? After paying your dues as a runner you will say that a lot less.)

My fears about looking fat? Um ... I was fat. But every run put that stored fat to good use. Farting and peeing? Just a sign I am a real runner. The kids, the hubby, the house ... they were all still there when I got back from working out, but I was a less stressed and way sweatier version of myself.

So, this is a little rambling-like, but I have a wicked paper cut on the tip of my middle finger, the hubs is watching politics on television, and I have my Ipod on to drown out the noise so I can freaking concentrate, cut me some slack, Dude.

To summarize: Exercise?1. Just do it. (Just kidding, I totally stole that from a little company called "Nike.")

1. Just do it faithfully.2. When you get bored, do different exercises faithfully.3. Repeat for the rest of your life.

Just for fun, to end this post I leave you with a picture my Sister Wife Rachel took at a wedding a few years ago of Rose and I.

I loved this dress. It was totally cuter in person.

And here is a picture of Rose and I at the recent Red Carpet Run 5K.

Suburban gang signs.

Since this post turned into more of a generic shout out to exercise (What up, Exercise!), tomorrow I am going to do a Practical Tips post about specific helps for diet and exercise. My "tricks of the trade" if you will. And I have a lot of them ... because I'm tricky.

*triumvirate - don't hate me because I have a thesaurus.

How to Lose 100 Pounds - Tricky Edition

Facebook Status: After cramping up at swim class I decided to start drinking my daily recommended amount of water. So far, the only difference I feel is that I feel I know the inside of my bathroom better.

So I promised today I would post some practical tips and helps for weight loss. If you haven't figured it out by now, I'm not the best at following traditional weight loss suggestions that I think aren't fun are really difficult to implement. For Example: I really suck at drinking enough water. Good thing iced coffee is totally made out of a little bit ofwater and mostly cream, or I'd completely be missing the mark on this staple piece of weight loss advice.

I'll start with FOOD:

Don't drink your caloriesunless they are from iced coffee. Unless you are making a meal out of a protein shake, most liquid calories are empty. Meaning, they will do nothing for your body except taste good. Now chill out, I'm totally not telling you what to do; if you want a glass of milk, dude, bottoms up*.(*this is where I was going to link to Trey Songz video for Bottom's Up and then I took a minute toread the lyrics. Sorry y'all, no link for you.) I'm not a drinker, but I think the calories in my beloved iced coffee are comparable with a glass of wine. So I treat those calories as treat calories. (Homophone alert!)(Not a slur.)(Google it.) They are still within my budget, but they're just calories that are used to make me happy. Not used to provide adequate nutrition.

Fiber is your friendespecially if you are taking your iron supplement. I'm not gonna lie - the main reason I'm a fiber girl is because it helps me "go". I own a lot of Benefiber. Ideally you should get your fiber from real food, but ... whatareyougonnado? The other awesome thing about fiber is that it slows down your body's absorption of sugar. Why does this matter? Let's pretend you eat a Krispy Kreme donut for breakfast. It is delicious. All that sugar rushes your system, LIFE IS GREAT, and then 30 minutes later you just want to take a long nap. After another 30 minutes you are starving, so you eat something else. (Probably a 400 calorie coffee from Starbucks.)(Probably.) This cycle can continue unbroken based upon your food choices.

Now let's look at whole grain toast with peanut butter. It's admittedly not as delicious as a KK, but it is more palatable than wheat grass, so, compromise. The fiber in the bread will work with the sugar in the pb to slow the sugar rush. This means no LIFE IS GREAT moment, but also no "must ... nap ... now..." moment, either. And it certainly skips over the 400 extra calorie binge moment. That's why I eat peanut butter inside of Reese's on my toast in the morning. Nut butters run about 100 calories per tablespoon (this is where you measure) so I make sure I spread my pb when the toast is really hot. This thins out the pb and I can cover all the toast with only 1 TB. Genius. (Note to self: I should totally patent that idea.)

*Protein* - It's good stuff. It's good for a lot of physiological reasons, like building up muscle and something to do with amino acids, but honestly, I majored in music, so once it sounds too science-y I tune out. (Oh my goodness - "tune" out? Music major? *giggle*) It's the building muscle part I fully support, because more muscle = greater calorie burn.

Prep work is the best few hours you will ever spend. (Except for watching Twilight.) I try to plan as much as possible. I make my menu for the week, make a grocery list I stick to, and *ideally* do all the prep work when I come home from shopping. Since I'm doing this post on the fly, I didn't have time to photograph a beautiful example of some of my prep work. Instead you get what is actually in my house right now.

Left baggie: 100 calories of almonds. Right baggie: 120 calories of Chex Mix.Scissors and lock of hair: What Esther did during her quiet time today. Again.I rule at parenting.

If I can take a few minutes on a Sunday night to portion out reasonable amounts of snack food, on Wednesday afternoon when I am mindlessly shoving food into my pie hole because maybe the four year old sneaked scissors and cut her hair by herself, again, then I have given myself the gift of self-control that I would not be able to have with a full bag of Chex Mix.

I also keep cut up veggies in the fridge, and spend extra money for store bought, cut up melon, because I freaking hate cutting up cantaloupe.

This Book was really helpful in shaping my overall weight loss philosophy. It was written by a mother and daughter who were each significantly more than 100 pounds overweight. They are both normal weight today.

Now on to WORKING OUT:

Find exercise you actually like to do. I really don't like step-aerobics. I am just too stinking uncoordinated. I get most of my exercise in aerobics from standing on the step turning drunkily (I totally just made drunk an adverb) and looking vaguely like I'm thinking about My Little Ponies or something else completely unrelated to the task at hand, which is following the actual routine. So I totally gave up on step aerobics and I pray blessings on the class as I pass it to go run. (Lord, please protect these super coordinated ladies - and token male - from a pulled hamstring. Amen.) If running's not your thing, find what is. It's not what you are doing, it's the doing that is important.

Change up your routine because it not only keeps you from getting bored, it helps your fitness improve. Your body gets bored as well, and it's all, "this is old hat, I can totally phone it in today," but throw it some unexpected burpees and it's all, "The heck? Where have I been? I better get my tush in gear."

Learn what it means to truly push yourself. I was always so worried about injury. I was worried about puking. I was so worried I never pushed myself. Then I took that running class and I thought I was going to die. Like, heart attack/gasping breath/vomit totally happening kind of dying. I totally didn't die. But I did discover a new level of normal for my athleticism. And now I'm not afraid of a workout that ends with me shaky-limbed, flopping around on a mat on the floor in a puddle of my own sweat, because it means that today I brought it.

Announce your goals publicly. I love me some Facebook for this. Your goal is there, in print, forever. Also, I love Dailymile.com. This keeps a good record of what you are doing, and other people can see it and judge you, which makes you work harder.

Workout buddies will shame you if you don't show/do your best/have a good attitude (if they are good ones). Working out is so much easier with a pal. The accountability is priceless. Sarah is a treasure to me. For realz.

Motivational stickers. Because I'm a nerd. A visual reward nerd.

"Kelly, those are lovely star stickers on your calendar. Whatever are they for?""Why, thank you, you are too kind. Every sticker represents a killer workout."

And finally, THIS:

I kinda wish I went to this gym. I bet it's the most fun gym EVER. (Definitely better than Lifetime.)

I just stumbled upon your blog after seeing that you won best entry in Holly's link up. Congrats! It was great! I am beginning the challenge of losing 100 lbs and am in my 2nd week of C25K. It is rough going, but I am determined. Thanks for the advice and motivation.

I am a new blogger and I am blogging about weight loss and family as well. If you are interested, you can find me at http://mscourtsieannb.blogspot.com

Thanks! C25K was the best thing that ever happened to me weight loss wise. It's been the thing that officially changed my view of exercise. It's really hard, but so worth it. Keep at it, sister! You got this :) I'll come visit you at your digs next :)

Just found your blog thru Runs for Cookies. I am an over weight working mother, pregnant with our 4th child (due in 11/13). I had plans on starting running after our 3rd child in 6/12 but never made time for myself. Just from reading your "Back story" and "How to lose 100 pounds" you have encourage me to make time for myself. Thank you so much and congrats on your amazing loss!

Thanks, Heather! Taking "mom time" is such a gift to the whole family - your body will thank you, your brain will thank you, and the hubs and kiddos will (eventually) thank you! Congrats on the new baby! Do you know what you are having? (Number 4 is the easiest one so far ;-) Good Luck, Mama :)

OMG. This was THE (Repeat: THE) funniest thing I have ever read.I love your style and looking forward to being a consistent reader. I am 42 yo momma of 3 and have recently embarked on getting my pounds under control! Thanks for the great read! At Heather Lindsey above...take time...you are a better parent.

I just found you through Runs for Cookies. I have been playing around with the idea of blogging about my weight loss journey (60 lbs down, 30ish to go), about running (started with C25K, about to run my 2nd half marathon) and homeschooling (my boy named Ezra!) all while being totally witty and entertaining- but here you are already writing about all that! ;)I will keep reading and figure out a new way to write about MY life without being accused of ripping off yours! :) Keep up the great work- I can't wait to read more!

I totally told my husband I met my internet twin right before you commented! Thanks for replying! My Ezra is 10. He's my only baby, and I'm a bit older than you, so we're not totally twinsies, but close enough. :) You will do GREAT at the half marathon! I did one in December, while injured and still weighing a bit over 200 lbs. It was a challenge to the say the least! I am looking forward to a MUCH better race in September, with more training, less weight and (Lord willing) no injuries! Best wishes on your training!

I am SO happy to have found your story. I was searching for ppl that have lost 100+ lbs. I don't have any patience for those that have lost 21 lbs. then think they are suddenly experts on losing weight. We need the stamina to lose 21 lbs, then lose 21 more lbs, etc. etc. I will get the Calorie Queens book, and I will keep reading your blog for more inspiration. Congratulations on all you have achieved. You're a superstar!

I am a 41 year old mother of a 19 month old and a 4 year old. I work away from home and I am gone 12 hours a day. I am almost 300 pounds and I was searching for some kind of a motivation. I want to be a better Mom to my girls and I know to do that I have to get serious about losing weight. I am a good Mom but I want to be a great Mom. You are an inspiration. I don't know if I will be successful but I am going to start my healthier life style and see where it takes me. Thanks for sharing your story.

Trish, that is fantastic. I love this comment. I am rooting for you. I am currently trying to teach myself that even the smallest changes bear results with consistency. That might help you, too, because as a mom with young kiddos who also works crazy hours, you don't have time to do any drastic changing of your lifestyle. Thankfully, little changes can make a big difference, and you *can* do it without spending five hours a day at the gym. Keep me posted on your progress! Good luck and thanks again for your kind words :)

You are crackin me up! I love the way you write about your journey, and I am sort of worshipping you right now.

I'm retired, 62, lost 40+ pounds last year (thanks, doc, for finding a nice, nonconfrontational way to say, girl, you need to get your head out of your ass and handle your business). I eat normal food but less of it, cut out the processed and empty stuff (except the mocha thing, which is totally necessary for quality of life). I walk 5 mi/day 5-6 days a week, do yoga and some weight lifting. I feel great, lookin' good and anticipating a lifespan in excess of 100 years. Okay, I'm exaggerating. But it's been working well.

And I've hit a plateau. I'm small framed and would be very comfortable and happy with another 20-30 pounds gone, but it's not budging. I've been considering the Couch to 5K thing and am worried about hurting my knees. I've got good shoes, at least for walking; I'm thinking maybe better shoes for running would help? What do you think?

I'm surrounded by people who are touting the magic pill method and roping people in to the idea of taking chemicals and paying a boatload of money without changing anything else. And of course they're not getting any healthier. I'm delighted to find somebody like you who's not afraid to show her before pictures, and who's doing it right. Keep on keepin' on!!

Great job on your amazing loss. 40 pounds is a huge deal, and it sounds like some serious lifestyle changes took place to get there. Awesome! About plateauing - do *not* swallow the Kool Aid and succumb to pills/chemicals ;-) I looooooooove Couch to 5K because it is super "user friendly". You can feel free to go at your own pace. I would definitely go to a running store and have your feet professionally fitted for running shoes. It will make a huge difference. You may have legit fears about your knees, but honestly, you won't know until you try. If running bothers your joints too much, just look for another way to change up your routine. I am currently falling in LOVE (swoon) with weight lifting, so that's my standard answer for everything lately - but swimming and elliptical are also great ways to move and are easier on your joints.

Thank you so much for reading and commenting! I'm thrilled to have you here!

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About Me

Sublurban Mama ingredients: One part Mama, one part wifey, one part HARDCORE athlete, one part constant inappropriate giggles. Bake on high for 34 years (not a drug joke) and wrap up in a big Pinterest ribbon. All while listening to Needtobreathe. And drinking iced coffee. Probably.

Hi. I am so glad you are reading my blog. You are awesome. I hope you return every day. And tell your friends about me. In fact, you are welcome to repost anything you see on this blog, providing you credit me and link back to my site. Please and thank you. Have a special day, Friend. I hope it's filled with Tim Horton's Iced Capp. And rainbows. And surprise marathons of Hoarders filled with episodes you haven't seen yet. And maybe even a kitten. But mostly Iced Capp.